danilo v. rogayan jr. - aghamazing guro...individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no...

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Howard Gardner’s DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR.

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Page 1: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Howard Gardner’s

DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR.

Page 2: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Ability or abilities to acquire and use knowledge for solving problems and adapting to the world (Woolfolk, 2008).

Most early theories about the nature of intelligence involved one or more of the following 3 themes: (1) the capacity to learn; (2) the total knowledge a person has acquired; and (3) the ability to adapt successfully to new situations and to the environment in general.

Page 3: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Multiple Intelligence Theory expands our definition of intelligence.

There are at least 8 separate intelligences.

Gardner stresses that there may be more kinds of intelligence- 8 is not a magic number.

Gardner speculated that there may be a spiritual intelligence and existential intelligence –the abilities to contemplate big questions about the meaning of life (2003).

1. Linguistic (verbal)2. Musical3. Spatial4. Logical-Mathematical5. Bodily-Kinesthetic

(movement)6. Interpersonal (understanding

others)7. Intrapersonal (understanding

self)8. Naturalist (observing and

understanding natural and human-made patterns and systems).

Page 4: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

(Source: From Educational Psychology (Figure, p.126 by A. Woolfolk, 2008)

Page 5: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7.

Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence is the ability to solve problems and create product or outcomes that are valued by a culture.

Varying cultures and eras of history place different values on the 8 intelligences.

Page 6: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

A naturalist intelligence is critical in farming culture, whereas verbal and mathematical intelligences are important in technological cultures.

Gardner believes that intelligence has a biological base.

An intelligence is “a biological and psychological potential; that potential is capable of being realized to a greater or lesser extent as a consequence of the experiential, cultural, and motivational factors that affect a person” (1998, p.62).

Page 7: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Pros All students will be seen as

successful.

All different talents of students will be appreciated.

A variety of instructional practices are used.

Lessons are planned with more thought.

Meets individual needs better.

Cons More time is needed for

lessons.

Assessing students' learning could be cumbersome.

Uniting a staff would be difficult.

More supplies would be needed.

Page 8: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Gardner’s multiple intelligences theory has not received wide acceptance in the scientific community, eventhough it has been embraced by many educators.

Some critics suggest that several intelligences are really talents (bodily-kinesthetic skill, musical ability) or personality traits (interpersonal ability).

Other “intelligences” are not new at all.

Page 9: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Many researchers have identified verbal and spatial abilities as elements of intelligence.

The 8 intelligences are not independent; there are correlations among the abilities.

Logical-mathematical and spatial intelligences are highly correlated (Sattler, 2001). So, these “separate abilities” may not be separate after all.

Recent evidence linking musical and spatial abilities has prompted Gardner to consider that there may be connections among the intelligences (Gardner, 1998).

Page 10: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Gardner (1998, 2003) has responded to critics by identifying a number of myths and misconceptions about multiple intelligences theory and schooling.

One is that intelligences are the same as learning styles (characteristic approaches to learning and studying.

Another misconception is that multiple intelligences theory disproves the idea of g (general knowledge).

Gardner does not deny the existence of a general ability, but does question how useful g is as an explanation for human achievements.

Page 11: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

An advantage of Gardner’s perspective is that it expands teachers’ thinking about abilities and avenues for teaching, but the theory has been misused.

Some educators embrace a simplistic version.

They include every “intelligence” in every lesson, no matter how inappropriate.

Page 12: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence
Page 13: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Each individual can be intelligent in their own way.

Each human can have a special talent or intelligence that makes them unique and special.

This theory opened peoples eyes to the short comings of the IQ tests and many other similar assessments.

Page 14: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Armstrong, Thomas (1994). Multiple Intelligence In the Classroom

Gardner, Howard (2006,). Multiple Intelligences: The Theory in Practice. http://books.google.com/books?id=qEEC8lyAwWoC&printsec=frontcover&dq=multiple+intelligence+theory&hl=en&ei=RVaCTrjrLYPMgQeGtsw6&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=multiple%20intelligence%20theory&f=false

Woolfolk, Anita (2008). Educational Psychology

Page 15: DANILO V. ROGAYAN JR. - AGHAMAZING GURO...Individuals may excel in 1 of these 8 areas, but have no remarkable abilities in the other 7. Gardner (1998, 2003) contends that an intelligence

Thank you!